Detecting concealed familiarity using eye movements: the role of task demands.
Tal NahariOryah Lancry-DayanGershon Ben-ShakharYoni PertzovPublished in: Cognitive research: principles and implications (2019)
Different tasks elicit different patterns of gaze behavior towards familiar and unfamiliar faces. Moreover, the ability to voluntarily control gaze behavior is tightly related to task demands. Adequate ability to control gaze was observed in the current visual detection task when memorizing the faces was not required for a successful accomplishment of the task. Thus, applied settings would benefit from a short-term memory task which is much more robust to countermeasure efforts. Beyond shedding light on theories of gaze preference, these findings provide a backbone for future research in the field of deception detection via eye movements.